DENVER - Timberwolves coach Rick Adelman didn't sound like a man of great faith when asked about a team that seemingly couldn't make a shot.
The Wolves' 29.5 percent shooting from three-point range is easily the worst in the NBA, and only four other teams are shooting worse than their 43 percent field-goal shooting.
After watching his team go 2-for-17 on threes Wednesday at Utah, Adelman was asked Thursday afternoon if he still believed it's only a matter of time before this team starts making shots.
"I don't know," he said. "We haven't been all year, and again, it's guys who have had a history of making them. We've been talking about that all the time. Last night, we had decent looks, they're just not going down. You've got to continue to take them. Guys have to continue to work at it and hopefully we'll start making some."
The trend continued in the first half against the Nuggets, when they went 1-for-8 from long range. But they turned it around after halftime, going 5-for-8 and getting back-to-back big threes late from Luke Ridnour and J.J. Barea to beat Denver 101-97.
Injuries to Chase Budinger and Brandon Roy haven't helped. Neither has a struggling Kevin Love, who is shooting only 21.7 percent on three-pointers and 35.2 percent from the floor.
"There's no doubt [Love improving] will help," Adelman said. "He's a floor spacer. When he gets it going, it opens things up for [center Nikola Pekovic], it opens up things for the guards."
Still miffed Wolves center Greg Stiemsma wasn't in much of a better mood before Thursday's game than he was after Wednesday's, when he fouled out in eight minutes and marched straight to the locker room late in the 106-84 loss to the Jazz.